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: Fravor described seeing a 40-foot-long, white, oblong object—resembling a large Tic Tac breath mint —hovering over a "disturbance" in the ocean.

: Moments later, the USS Princeton reported the same object at their pre-arranged rendezvous point, 60 miles away. It had traveled that distance in under a minute, suggesting speeds of approximately 3,700 mph. The USS Theodore Roosevelt Encounters (2014–2015)

: Traveling at Mach 5 or higher without creating a sonic boom. unidentified_naval_pilots_shocking_ufo_encounte...

The most famous of these encounters occurred on November 14, 2004, off the coast of Southern California. Commander David Fravor and Lieutenant Commander Alex Dietrich, flying F/A-18F Super Hornets from the USS Nimitz , were diverted to investigate a radar contact detected by the USS Princeton .

For decades, the topic of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) resided in the fringes of science fiction and conspiracy theories. However, starting in 2017, a series of stunning admissions by the Pentagon and firsthand accounts from elite Naval aviators brought these "Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena" (UAPs) into the mainstream spotlight. These aren't just ghost stories; they are accounts from highly trained observers backed by advanced military sensor data. The 2004 Nimitz "Tic Tac" Incident : Fravor described seeing a 40-foot-long, white, oblong

As Commander Fravor testified to Congress, the technology witnessed was "far superior than anything that we had" and remains one of the greatest mysteries of modern aviation.

: Observing objects moving between space, the atmosphere, and underwater without changing speed. A New Era of Transparency For decades, the topic of Unidentified Flying Objects

: Moving from a standstill to hypersonic speeds without damaging G-forces.